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*This story occurs before [[DW]]: ''[[The Aztecs]]'' | *This story occurs before [[DW]]: ''[[The Aztecs]]'' | ||
== | ==Home video releases== | ||
===DVD Release=== | ===DVD Release=== | ||
The DVD was released on 21st September 2009 in the UK, with North American release occurring in January 2010. As the first three stories are only available at present in the ''[[The Beginning]]'' box set, and ''[[Marco Polo (TV story)|Marco Polo]]'' remains a lost story, ''The Keys of Marinus'' stands as the earliest ''Doctor Who'' story currently available on its own. | The DVD was released on 21st September 2009 in the UK, with North American release occurring in January 2010. As the first three stories are only available at present in the ''[[The Beginning]]'' box set, and ''[[Marco Polo (TV story)|Marco Polo]]'' remains a lost story, ''The Keys of Marinus'' stands as the earliest ''Doctor Who'' story currently available on its own. |
Revision as of 00:05, 1 June 2010
The Keys of Marinus was the fifth story of Season 1 of Doctor Who, and was the second story to be written by Terry Nation. It was notable for its structure, in that it was the first of several "traveling" serials. Like The Chase, The Daleks' Master Plan and The Infinite Quest that followed it, Keys had the main cast moving to a different setting in almost every episode.
Additionally, it introduced the Voords, the first in a long line of deliberate, but generally unsuccessful, attempts on the part of the production team to find an enemy as popular as the Daleks. It was also the first story to endure the temporary absence of one of its leading actors, and the first which did not end with a cliffhanger into the next serial.
Synopsis
The planet Marinus is under threat from the evil Voords. The only hope of stopping them is to recover the keys to a machine known as the Conscience of Marinus, which have been hidden around the planet.
The First Doctor, Susan, Ian and Barbara are forced to search for the keys, transported round the planet by the elderly Arbitan, Keeper of the Conscience. On their travels they face numerous dangers, eventually recovering all the keys. However, Arbitan has been killed by the evil Yartek, leader of the Voords. Ian fools him by giving him a fake key, and the machine explodes, killing Yartek and putting an end to the Voord threat.
Plot
The Sea of Death (1)
On a small island with a glass beach surrounded by an acid sea on the planet Marinus, stands a tower with many secret entrances. Within is Arbitan, Keeper of the Conscience of Marinus, a vast computer developed two millennia earlier as a vast justice machine which kept law and order across the entire planet. For seven hundred years it was absolute, radiating its power across the planet and eliminating all thought of evil, but then a Voord named Yartek worked out how to resist its impulses. When the First Doctor and his companions Barbara Wright, Ian Chesterton and Susan arrive of the island they are brought into the tower to an audience with Arbitan, who explains that the society of Marinus is in danger. Several submersibles have washed up on the beach outside containing Voord, humanoid creatures protected by black rubber wet suits, which seem amphibian. Inspired by Yartek, the Voord are seeking to enter the tower and take control of the Conscience. Arbitan explains that the Conscience has now been upgraded sufficiently to control the Voord again and needs to be activated, but years earlier he prevented it falling into Voord control by separating the five keys needed to regulate it. The five keys are in different locations - one is in his possession but the other four are scattered over Marinus – and can only be found by following directions pre-set into travel dials which he hands out. The dials have the power to transport the time travellers across the planet to the correct locations, and he asks that the Doctor and his friends help him by gathering the keys together. Others have tried to accomplish this, even Arbitan's own daughter, but none have returned. The Doctor refuses the request but is then denied access to the TARDIS and so forced to set off on the quest. As the four companions' teleport away using the dials, Arbitan is overcome and stabbed to death by a Voord that has gained access to the tower. Barbara has teleported first, and when the others arrive at their destination, only her bloodied travel dial is found.
The Velvet Web (2)
Barbara is found safe in the city of Morphoton. Seemingly advanced and pacifist inhabitants impress the travellers with the luxuries, advances and aesthetics of the city, but all is not as it seems. Barbara is the first to see the truth when she accidentally avoids a powerful hypnotic pulse, and is able to see that the City is really a place of dirt and squalor. It is governed by four brain creatures, with hideous eyes on stalks, which communicate through their life-support machines. The Brains of Morphoton use hypnosis to control the entire city, having outgrown their bodies, and the entire human population of the city is now subjugated to their will. Barbara is imprisoned but there makes contact with a slave girl called Sabetha, whom she deduces is Arbitan’s missing daughter, and who wears one of the Keys about her neck. Barbara helps break her conditioning and together they escape and destroy the jars and equipment protecting the brains. With the life-support ruined, they die, and all the human subjects of the city are freed. Another slave called Altos remembers he too was sent to the city by Arbitan, and he and Sabetha decide to join the Doctor and his friends on their quest. The six now split up, with the Doctor going ahead to find the final key in the city of Millennius, while the others venture to find the second key in the next destination. Susan arrives first, wanting to avoid a long goodbye with her grandfather, but soon her ears are deafened by a growing screeching.
The Screaming Jungle (3)
The next location for the five searchers is a dangerous screaming jungle, which has a particularly debilitating effect on the telepathic Susan. In the jungle is an ancient temple overgrown with plants. Much of the flora is hostile and the travellers are relieved to find the next Key so easily, propped on the top of a statue in the temple. However, this is a fake and, when touched, activates ancient machinery that causes the statues to move. Indeed, the whole temple is a place of danger and traps. When Barbara is caught in the mechanism and disappears, Ian decides she may have gone on to the next location and so sends Altos, Sabetha and Susan after her while he remains to search for the Key. No sooner are they gone than Ian finds Barbara again. Hidden in the temple is an aged and dying scientist, Darrius, whom Ian saves from an attack by a creeper. Very weak, the old man explains the traps of the temple are to fool the Voord, and that he too is a friend of Arbitan. Before dying he tells Ian and Barbara the Key is hidden in "D-E-3-O-2". With the plants becoming more aggressive as the moments pass, mutated by a growth accelerator built by Darrius, the two friends only just manage to retrieve the Key from an experiment jar before the vegetation over-runs the room. Arriving in the next location, they find it bitterly, paralyzingly cold.
The Snows of Terror (4)
Ian and Barbara now teleport to an icy wasteland where they meet the duplicitous trapper Vasor, who steals their Keys and sends Ian back into the wastelands where he hopes he will be eaten by packs of wolves. In the wastes Ian finds Altos, bound and abandoned, and works out Vasor is to blame. Ian and Altos return to the trapper’s hut and confront him, forcing the wicked man to reveal the stolen Keys in his possession and to take them to the ice caves where he had earlier abandoned Sabetha and Susan. The two girls have meanwhile searched the icy caves themselves and uncovered mechanised Ice Soldiers. The travellers are soon reunited, but a rope bridge over a chasm is detached by Vasor and he escapes, trapping them. While they attempt to get back across the chasm, they find the next Key frozen in a block of ice. Their removal of the Key revives the Ice Soldiers, who begin a vicious rampage. Susan bravely crawls over huge ice stalactites they place over the chasm, reattaches the bridge, and they all flee back to the trappers' cottage and retrieve their stolen dials, using them to escape. Vasor is killed by the Ice Soldiers' swords as they try to break into his cabin. In the next location, Ian discovers the key in a display case, with a man knocked out next to him. Soon Ian himself is knocked out, and the criminal steals the key.
Sentence of Death (5)
When the travellers reach the next location Ian finds himself accused of the murder of Eprin, a friend of Altos, who had discovered the key shortly before his death. The Key has now disappeared and Ian is accused of theft as well. The punishment will be death if he found guilty before the court of Millennius. By the laws of Millennius, it is up to the defence to prove Ian's innocence beyond reasonable doubt. The other travellers are reunited in advance of Ian’s trial, at which the Doctor takes on the role of defence counsel. He succeeds in postponing the trial for two days while he gathers evidence and uses this time to work out what really happened to Eprin. He works out that the relief guard, Aydan, is implicated in the murder, but Aydan too is murdered during the course of the trial before he can reveal the truth of the plot. Things take a turn for the worse when Susan is kidnapped and used as a hostage to try and persuade the Doctor not to investigate the crimes any further.
The Keys of Marinus (6)
The kidnapper is Kala, Aydan’s widow, who is in league with Eyesen, the Court Prosecutor, who has succeeded in persuading the Three Judges of Millennium to find Ian guilty of Eprin’s murder. Luckily, the others find Susan before Kala can kill her, like she did to her own husband, and the plot is uncovered. Tarron, the Chief Investigator of the City, is now also persuaded of Kala’s guilt but they must still uncover her accomplice to prove Ian did not kill Eprin. The Doctor helps unmask Eyesen and uncover the last Key, which had been hidden in the murder weapon, and Ian is freed.
The travellers now return to Arbitan’s island using their travel dials. Altos and Sabetha have travelled ahead with all but the last Key in their possession. They do not know the old Keeper is dead and that Yartek is now in charge, clothed in Arbitan’s robes to maintain the ruse. Yartek has seized the first four Keys and holds Altos and Sabetha prisoner while he awaits the fifth and final one. When the Doctor and his three friends arrive they soon realize that the Voord has taken over control of the tower and the Conscience. The false Arbitan seems to be in control, but the Doctor is cleverer. He frees Sabetha and Altos and then unmasks the Voord. Ian too has played his part, and given Yartek the false key from the Screaming Jungle. When Yartek places the false Key in the Conscience, the machine explodes and he is killed along with the occupying Voord. The Doctor and his friends flee the tower with Altos and Sabetha before the growing blaze overtakes the ancient structure.
Cast
- The Doctor - William Hartnell
- Ian Chesterton - William Russell
- Barbara Wright - Jacqueline Hill
- Susan Foreman - Carole Ann Ford
- Arbitan - George Coulouris
- Yartek - Stephen Dartnell
- Voords - Martin Cort, Peter Stenson, Gordon Wales
- Altos - Robin Phillips
- Sabetha - Katherine Schofield
- Voice of Morpho - Heron Carvic
- Warrior - Martin Cort
- Darrius - Edmund Warwick
- Vasor - Francis de Wolff
- Ice Soldiers - Michael Allaby, Alan James, Peter Stenson, Anthony Verner
- Tarron - Henley Thomas
- Larn - Michael Allaby
- Senior judge - Raf De La Torre
- First judge - Alan James
- Second judge - Peter Stenson
- Kala - Fiona Walker
- Aydan - Martin Cort
- Eyesen - Donald Pickering
- Guard - Alan James
- Double for Arbitan - John Berrbohm (uncredited)
- Eprin - Dougie Dean (uncredited)
- Ladies in Waiting - Faith Hines, Lynda Taylor, Daphne Thomas, Veronica Thornton, Sharon Young (all uncredited)
- Idol - Bob Haddow (uncredited)
- Citizens of Millennius - Patricia Anne, Brian Bates, Desmond Callum-Jones, Johnny Crawford, Billy Dean, Adrian Drotsky, Tony Hennessy, Jill Howard, Yvonne Howard, Cecilia Johnson, David Kramer, Heidi Laine, Tony Lambden, Monique Lewis, Perrin Lewis, Leslie Shannon, Valerie Stanton, Rosina Stewart, Veronica Thornton, Les Wilkinson (all uncredited)
Crew
- Writer - Terry Nation
- Director - John Gorrie
- Producer - Verity Lambert
- Script Editor - David Whitaker
- Designer - Raymond Cusick
- Assistant Floor Manager - Timothy Combe
- Associate Producer - Mervyn Pinfield
- Costumes - Daphne Dare
- Incidental Music - Norman Kay
- Make-Up - Jill Summers
- Production Assistant - David Conroy
- Production Assistant - Penny Joy
- Special Sound - Brian Hodgson
- Studio Lighting - Peter Murray
- Studio Sound - Jack Brummitt
- Studio Sound - Tony Milton
- Theme Arrangement - Delia Derbyshire
- Title Music - Ron Grainer
References
- The Doctor claims to have met Pyrrho, the founder of scepticism.
- Despite arriving in Morphoton only seconds before the others Barbara is able to change clothes, meet the city leader, learn the city's history and be generally treated as an honoured guest.
Story Notes
- All episodes exist as 16mm telerecordings.
- Negative film prints of all episodes were recovered from BBC Enterprises in 1978.
- An Arabic print of "The Sea of Death" is held by the BBC.
- Terry Nation wrote this story as a replacement to The Red Fort, a story that was to be set during the Indian Mutiny.
- William Hartnell does not appear in The Screaming Jungle or The Snows of Terror as the actor was on holiday during the filming of these episodes. This was the first time the lead actor had been allowed to be absent in this way; nonetheless, Hartnell receives screen credit for these episodes. His co-stars will also take time off for holiday during production of upcoming stories.
- This story contains a controversial scene in which it appears that Vasor attempts to rape Barbara.
- Darrius is never referred to by name but his name appears in the show's credits.
- Stephen Dartnell was cast as Yartek, the Voord leader. A few weeks later, he appeared in The Sensorites as the troubled astronaut John.
- Initially it was hoped that the Voords would catch on with young viewers in the same way the Daleks had inspired Dalekmania, with toys, books, and other merchandise. This, however, did not come to pass.
- This is the first story to feature a model TARDIS materialisation.
- Smalls parts of the original film negative for this story were damaged. For the 2009 DVD release, computer imagery was used to restore these small scenes. An example of this is in episode two when Barbara sees Altos in the "real world" for the first time; according to the DVD information text commentary, the first few seconds of the scene had to be recreated via computers to bypass the damaged part of the negative. Episode 4 used an off-air soundtrack recording and a short piece of recycled footage to recreate a short piece of dialogue lost from the master negative.
- Between episodes 2 and 3, the BBC launched BBC Two, a second network. Episode 3, therefore, was the first episode to be aired under the branding BBC One.
- The basic format of the story - six separate storylines connected by a quest to retrieve a series of items, was later reused for the season-long Key to Time story arc of Season 16.
- In episode 5, the Doctor is heard to stumble over the phrase "I can't prove at this very moment", saying initially "I can't improve at this very moment." Although William Hartnell was notorious for stumbling over dialogue (which, due to time and budget restrictions preventing retakes was often left in the broadcasts), this isn't one of those occasions. According to the DVD trivia track, for some reason Terry Nation wrote this stumble into the script, which Hartnell delivered accurately.
Ratings
- The Sea of Death - 9.9 million viewers
- The Velvet Web - 9.4 million viewers
- The Screaming Jungle - 9.9 million viewers
- The Snows of Terror - 10.4 million viewers
- Sentence of Death - 7.9 million viewers
- The Keys of Marinus - 6.9 million viewers
Myths
- Yartek's race is known as the Voord. (Although they are referred to as the Voord in some of the dialogue, the term most often used is Voords and this is the name that appears in the closing credits).
Filming locations
Production errors
- The radiation counter is on the opposite side of the console to its location in The Daleks.
- There are at least two stagehands caught on camera in Episode 1.
- It is clear that the Voord falling to his death in Episode 1 is a cardboard cut-out.
- While walking around the TARDIS force field in Episode 1, Susan can be seen walking in front of Ian and into the barrier with no ill effects.
- In episode 2, while Susan is sleeping, a camera can be seen casting a shadow on her.
- In episode 4, when Ian goes to cross the rope bridge, his weight causes the cardboard wall the bridge is attached to to noticeably pull away from the side of the set and nearly fall down.
- In episode 6, the Voord escorting Sabetha trips over his "scuba" feet and nearly pulls a sliding door off its track.
Continuity
- While in the screaming jungle Susan comments that she has heard the noise before. This was most likely during her visit to the planet Esto which is inhabited by telepathic plants that screech when anyone stands between them and disrupts their communication. (DW: The Sensorites)
- Ian wears the costume he wore in DW: Marco Polo throughout this story.
- It is revealed in NA: No Future that the Monk was once an advisor to the Voords.
- A future for the Voord is explored in DWM: The World Shapers.
- The planet Marinus, and specifically the Voord, are mentioned EDA: Interference - Book Two
Timeline
- This story occurs after MA: The Sorcerer's Apprentice
- This story occurs before DW: The Aztecs
Home video releases
DVD Release
The DVD was released on 21st September 2009 in the UK, with North American release occurring in January 2010. As the first three stories are only available at present in the The Beginning box set, and Marco Polo remains a lost story, The Keys of Marinus stands as the earliest Doctor Who story currently available on its own.
Contents:
- The Sets of Marinus - Interview with designer Raymond Cusick
- Photo Gallery
- Production Note Subtitles
- PDF Material (DVD/ROM - PC/MAC)
- Radio Times listings
- Cadet Sweets: Doctor Who and the Daleks - Scans of the entire set of the Cadet Sweet cards, which features a mini Doctor Who story involving the Daleks and the Voord
- Audio Commentary (moderated by Clayton Hickman): Actors William Russell and Carole Ann Ford, director John Gorrie and designer Raymond Cusick
Rear Credits:
- Starring William Hartnell with William Russell, Jacqueline Hill and Carole Ann Ford
- Written by Terry Nation
- Directed by John Gorrie
- Produced by Verity Lambert
- Incidental Music by Norman Kay
Notes:
- Editing for DVD release completed by Doctor Who Restoration Team.
VHS Release
Released as Doctor Who: The Keys of Marinus
- UK Release: March 1999 / US Release: July 1999
- PAL - BBC Video BBCV6671 (2 tapes)
- NTSC - CBS/FOX Video 14263 (2 tapes)
- NTSC - Warner Video E1383 (2 tapes)
- Editing for VHS release completed by Doctor Who Restoration Team.
Novelisation
- Main article: Doctor Who and the Keys of Marinus
This story was published as Doctor Who and the Keys of Marinus in August 1980, ISBN 0-426-20125-6 . Philip Hinchcliffe wrote the novelisation based on Terry Nation's script. The cover art was by David McAllister. The novel was number 38 in the total series of 156 Doctor Who novels published by Target Books.
See also
to be added